TITLE SHOWDONE?

When Manchester City and Liverpool last met in the Premier League, a fixture usually bulging with goals failed to live up to its billing as the most entertaining in English soccer.

A 0-0 draw at Anfield in October left a worldwide audience somewhat underwhelmed.

Expect a return to normal when the two meet again on Thursday with so much more riding on the result.

In the first meeting, it felt like the teams were sizing each other up. There was nothing between them in the standings, they were tied on points after seven games, and plenty of respect was shown on both sides.

Liverpool on top

Now it's different as Liverpool leads second-placed Tottenham by six points and City by seven. Liverpool is not only unbeaten and on a nine-match winning run, 4-0 over Newcastle and 5-1 over Arsenal.

City manager Pep Guardiola's proclamation that if his side drops points it would leave the title race "finished" suggests the champions will go all out for a win at Etihad Stadium.

With its dynamic front three of Mohamed Salah, Sadio Mane and Roberto Firmino, Liverpool is never more dangerous than on the counterattack.

So, a City side going for broke against a Liverpool team looking to hit on the break means something has to give.

"Our pride has been hurt over recent weeks but we have everything to play for. It depends on us," said City captain Vincent Kompany, a player never afraid to build up matches and tell it like it is.

"Every living soul that comes into the stadium has to be ready to fight."

Guardiola has previously spoken of how Liverpool's attackers scare'' him. And there's a sense he struggles to set teams up against managerial counterpart Juergen Klopp. Klopp has won seven of his 15 meetings with Guardiola over the years, losing only once in seven while both have been in English soccer.

Dating back to before Klopp arrived in 2015, Liverpool has lost just one of its past 11 meetings with City, and that was a 5-0 defeat early last season after Mane was sent off in the first half.

Wary Guardiola

Guardiola, not Klopp, has been the one tinkering with tactics heading into their matchups. In last year's league game at Anfield, he played an extra midfielder in Ilkay Gundogan instead of a winger, Raheem Sterling, and it left the team lopsided. In October, he reined in his fullbacks and kept the central midfield compact and close to his wingers.

In a way, Guardiola went against his own unwavering belief in an attack-minded approach, showing he had learned his lessons from three straight losses to Liverpool toward the end of last season, two of which came in the Champions League quarterfinals.

In the second leg, City needed to win and Liverpool kept it tight before picking the hosts off with second-half goals by Salah and Firmino at the Etihad.

Those will likely be Klopp's tactics again with Liverpool defender Andrew Robertson acknowledging City will "go full throttle into us."

Guardiola knows the size of his team's task, however, against an opponent on course to match Arsenal's achievement in 2003-04 of going unbeaten in the Premier League season. Liverpool is seeking its first top-flight title since 1990, and its 19th overall.

Recent Messages ()

Please rate before posting your Review

OR PROCEED WITHOUT REGISTRATION

Share on Twitter

SIGN IN WITH

Refrain from posting comments that are obscene, defamatory or inflammatory, and do not indulge in personal attacks, name calling or inciting hatred against any community. Help us delete comments that do not follow these guidelines by marking them offensive. Let's work together to keep the conversation civil.